• Eur J Pain · Oct 2016

    Short lasting transient effects of a capsaicin 8% patch on nociceptor activation in humans.

    • G Landmann, C Lustenberger, W Schleinzer, M Schmelz, L Stockinger, and R Rukwied.
    • Centre for Pain Medicine, Swiss Paraplegic Centre, Nottwil, Switzerland.
    • Eur J Pain. 2016 Oct 1; 20 (9): 1443-53.

    BackgroundAt high concentration, the TRPV-1 agonist capsaicin de-sensitizes nociceptors and reduces the intra-epidermal nerve density.MethodsWe investigated the effects of a 5 × 10 cm capsaicin 8% patch on C- and A-delta-nociceptor activation in ten healthy subjects before and at days 1-3-7-21 after patch application. Thermal thresholds, infrared thulium-YAG laser-evoked potentials (LEP) and heat pain (numeric rating scale, NRS, 0-10), electrically induced pain (10 pulses, 1.5-fold pain threshold intensity, five randomized series of 5-10-20-50-100 Hz), and axon-reflex flare (laser Doppler imaging) were recorded.ResultsThermal hypoesthesia developed upon capsaicin 8% treatment. Warmth detection thresholds increased at day 1-3, heat pain thresholds were increased by about 2.6 °C after day 3, and laser-evoked heat pain remained significantly reduced for 7 days. Axon-reflex flare responses (days 1-3), but not supra-threshold electrically induced pain were significantly reduced by the capsaicin patch.ConclusionsAxonal nociceptor function assessed by electrical excitability tests supplements threshold tests of nociceptive endings. The differential analgesic effects of 8% capsaicin patches may be attributed to the kinetics of capsaicin and the different depth of nociceptive nerve fibres, yet, the time course does not match the long-lasting analgesia observed in neuropathic pain patients treated with the same patch. WHAT DOES THIS STUDY ADD?: Axonal nociceptor function assessed by supra-threshold electrical excitability tests did not coincide with capsaicin-induced transduction changes supplementing threshold measures of terminal nociceptor endings. Threshold measurements do not reflect the sustained effect of pain relief seen in neuropathic pain patients. Capsaicin-sensitive nociceptors responsible for spontaneous pain are either not specifically tested with currently available sensory stimulation protocols or have higher capsaicin sensitivity or slower recovery under neuropathic conditions.© 2016 European Pain Federation - EFIC®

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